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Approved for Public Release; Distribution Unlimited Case # 12-1324

FLIGHT MANAGEMENT COMPUTER (FMC) NAVIGATION DATABASE CAPACITY


Albert A. Herndon The MITRE Corporations Center for Advanced Aviation System Development McLean, Virginia 22102

Abstract
Navigation database (NDB) capacity (memory size) has always been an issue in aircraft Flight Management Computers (FMC). And, that issue is a concern for Performance-based Navigation (PBN) Implementation as so many new next generation (NextGen) procedures are being developed and many FMCs no longer have the capacity for additions to their NDBs. For the near-term, the problem will just keep getting worse for aircraft with FMCs limited by capacity due to the growth in the number of coded procedures and waypoints to store and limitations in the storage size. Anecdotal evidence finds navigation database suppliers estimating that worldwide procedure production will increase database size approximately 3% to 8% annually for the forseable future.1 In many cases, the airlines must already strictly tailor the available sets of procedures in their databases according to geographic areas to meet current FMC memory capacity constraints. Fortunately, the trend for the mid-term and far-term is that the projected growth rate will not be such an issue given the actual and potential additional memory expansion of new FMCs. However, a related concern is a means to move away from the binary packing of data into a general standard that works with all FMCs. Database development groups are proposing using a version of Extensible Markup Language (XML) which will take up significantly more storage. FMC vendors and airlines have expressed concern over this proposal because of memory storage requirements. This proposal is still in its infancy and has yet to be proposed as a formal standard. This paper provides background on FMC database capacity and factors that influence memory requirements. It addresses airlines tailoring of navigation databases and the status of memory in
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current FMCs operating within the United States National Airspace System (NAS). It also introduces the methods the airlines use to reduce the size of their NDBs despite the tide of procedures being developed worldwide.

Introduction

All modern transport category aircraft have Flight Management Systems (FMS). The FMS consists of navigation radio receivers; inertial reference systems; air data systems; navigation, flight and instrument displays; flight control systems; engine and fuel system; and data link. These subsystems are managed and processed by the Flight Management Computer (FMC). The FMC provides the primary navigation, flight planning, and optimized terminal routes and en route guidance for the aircraft and is typically comprised of interrelated functions such as navigation, flight planning, trajectory prediction, performance computations, and guidance. The FMC and associated databases are an essential part of modern airline avionics. An FMC typically contains three databases in addition to the basic operational flight program (OFP). The first is a software options database which activates the optional functionality contained in the OFP that is desired by the operator. The second is the model and engine performance database and contains all the aircraft performance data which allows the FMC to compute fuel burn, optimum altitudes and airspeeds, etc. The third is the navigation database (NDB). The NDB contains all the information required for building a flight plan and processing that plan when airborne. All these databases are stored in the FMC on an electrically erasable programmable read-only memory (EEPROM) card. Each of these databases can be updated via a data loader.

Jeppesen, Lido, EAG

The NDB contains terminal and en route fixes; waypoints and navigation reference system (NRS) grid points; intersections; airways including high altitude jet airways, low altitude victor airways, T routes, Q routes and oceanic routes; radio navigation aids such as distance measuring equipment (DME), very high frequency (VHF) omnidirectional range (VOR), and instrument landing systems (ILS). It also contains airports; runways; standard terminal arrival routes (STAR); standard instrument departures (SID); holding patterns; and instrument approaches such as VOR, non-directional beacon, area navigation (RNAV), required navigation performance (RNP), satellite based navigation system (SBAS), and ground based navigation system (GBAS). The data format specification for the NDB is defined in ARINC 424.2

Scope

Figure 1: Typical Navigation Database Structure There are three primary commercial providers of navigation data in the world. They are Jeppesen Sanderson based in Centennial, Colorado, owned by the Boeing Company; Lido/FMS in Zurich, Switzerland, owned by Lufthansa Systems; and the European Aeronautical Group (EAG) with the navigation data division located in Walton-onThames, Surrey, United Kingdom, owned by NavTech. Each of these companies compiles, maintains and updates a worldwide navigation database coded into ARINC 4244 format. The data is obtained from the Aeronautical Information Publications (AIP) of all the International Civil Aviation Organization (ICAO) States. The data is updated via the commercial 28 day single Aeronautical Information Regulation and Control (AIRAC) cycle detailed in ICAO Annex 15, Aeronautical Information Services (AIS)5 document which defines a series of common dates and an associated standard aeronautical information publication procedure for States. A double cycle is 56 days and is used by some government entities such as the FAA. Cycles are designated by a four digit code YYcc, where YY represents the calendar year, and cc indicates the sequential cycle number for the calendar year. Cycles may span from one calendar year to the next. An example is that the last cycle for 2011, numbered 1113, valid from December 15, 2011; rolled into 2012, valid until January 11, 2012. The first cycle for 2012 was 1201

This paper describes the navigation database capacity of FMCs, factors influencing NDB size and manufacturer and airline issues. The data depicted was obtained from airlines, and database suppliers and providers in 2011 and early 2012.

Background
Current high-quality data in the FMC are essential for optimum and safe navigation. Quality and integrity of the data in the United States is governed by Federal Aviation Administration (FAA) Advisory Circular (AC) 20-153A, Acceptance of Aeronautical Data Processes and Associated Databases3. Using the on-board FMC the pilot can assess flight-relevant information from the aeronautical data provided in the NDB which is updated every 28 days. Figure 1 represents the layering structure of a typical FMC. Level 1 is company route data, Level 2 is the 28 day navigation database and Level 3 is other nonessential data. These levels comprise permanent, supplemental and temporary data. Each category has a finite capacity for data. An example of permanent data is a runway. Supplemental data can only be entered on the ground and then is stored indefinitely but may be deleted by the crew. Temporay data is automatically deleted after the flight is completed.
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ARINC [1] AC 20-153 [2]

beginning January 12, 2012. When the data is updated by the commercial providers the master ARINC 424 file is sold to the flight management computer manufacturers where the file is packed in a proprietary format to function in their specific FMCs. These FMC manufacturers include Honeywell, General Electric (GE), Thales, Universal Avionics, Rockwell Collins International, CMC Electronics, Garmin and Avidyne. As airlines may contract for NDBs from any one of the three data providers, the FMC manufacturers must build three sets of data for their FMCs. An example would be GE which has FMCs installed in all the Boeing 737-300/900 series aircraft. A U.S. B737 airline operator may contract with Jeppesen, while a South American airline may use Lido, and a European airline may use EAG. The evolution of the NDB from start to finish is shown in Figure 2.

NAVIGATION DATABASE CAPACITY


A major issue for implementation of new procedures is the fact that the capacity of NDBs in many FMCs is limited. The issue is characterized in Figure 3. The FAA Instrument Flying Handbook6 explains that as the data in a worldwide database grows more detailed, the required data storage space increases. Over the years that FMC's have developed, the size of the commercially available airborne navigation data has grown exponentially. Later, this paper will illustrate that some manufacturers systems have kept up with this growth and some have not. Many of the limitations of older systems are a direct result of limited data storage capacity. For this reason, avionics manufacturers and individual airlines must make decisions regarding which types of data records will be extracted from the master ARINC 424 database to be included with their system. For instance, an older FMC rarely includes all of the waypoints that are coded into master databases. Even some modern FMCs, which typically have much larger storage capacity, do not include all of the data that is available from the database providers. The manufacturers often choose not to include certain types of data that they think is of low importance to the usability of their FMC and airlines further reduce data that is not pertinent to their operation and route structure. At the request of an airline a manufacturer may reduce the size of the data storage required in their avionics by limiting the geographic area the database covers. Like paper charts, the amount of data that needs to be carried with the aircraft is directly related to the size of the coverage area. Depending on the data storage that is available, this means that the larger the required coverage area, the less detailed the database may be. Size and capacity management of data will be discussed later.

Figure 2: Evolution of the NDB

ARINC [1] Annex 15 [3] 6 FAA IFH [4]


4 5

bit processors a Quadruple Word (QWORD) represents 64 bits or 8 bytes of data. In modern computers, a single character consumes 2 bytes of data in memory. So the word fix would consume 6 bytes. NDB procedures are built using records made up of words.7 Examples are in Table 1. Word counts are relevant when reviewing Word capacity in Tables 2 and 3. Table 1: Words per data type Courtesy of Honeywell

Figure 3: Characterization of NDB Capacity

Database Size
The Jeppesen GE worldwide NDB (this refers to the Jeppesen data that is used in the GE Aviation NDB for their FMCs) for runway ends over 5,000 feet with an instrument approach procedure (IAP) is currently (cycle 1203) 7,877 kilobytes (KB) or 7.8 megabytes (MB). A recent worldwide Lido GE 28 day NDB for runways over 5,000 ft was 6 MB. A recent Jeppesen Universal worldwide NDB for runways over 2,000 ft was 8.2 MB and the one for runways over 5,000 ft was 7 MB. Note that Jeppesen, Lido and EAG do not necessarily provide data for the same airports and runways. GE has estimated their NDB will grow up to 3% per year through 2020 and Lido is predicting a 6% to 8% growth per year in their database. Referencing the Navigation Database Strcture in Figure 1, the NDB sizes mentioned above do not include company routes nor do they include data such as gates, floating waypoints, NRS grid points, special procedures and other tailored airline data. Within the NAS, there are many FMCs that would not hold a worldwide NDB nor come close to holding a U.S. only NDB. FMC database capacity is reported in words and/or bytes. A comparison of reported capacity values is not straightforward since manufacturers may use data compression techniques and different processor architectures (i.e. 16 bit, 32 bit, or 64 bit). A 16 bit processor represents 2 bytes. A byte is 8 bits and a binary bit is a one or zero. A word represents 16 bits or 2 bytes. In a 32 bit processor a Double Word (DWORD) is available and represents 32 bits or 4 bytes of data. In the newer 64
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DATA TYPE VORs NDBs Waypoints Geo Coordinates Airways Holding Patterns Airports Runways Procedure Name Gates Route Name

WORDS/ RECORD 7 6 5 21 1 4 13 10 5 5 3

In Table 2 are examples of some current airline FMCs with limited NDB capacities which are operating in the NAS. The table is divided into three sections: Data from Aircraft Manufacturers, Data from Avionics Manufacturers and Data from Airlines. Table 38 represents the approximate amount of aircraft currently operating in the NAS with limited NDB capacity. When reviewing Table 2, refer to the Navigation Database Capacity, Database Size section above that describes a typical worldwide NDBs range from approximately 6 MB to 8.2 MB in

ARINC 424 [1] MITRE U.S. Air Transport Fleet RNAV/RNP Capability Report dated February 2, 2012

size.

Table 2: FMC NDB Capacity from Aircraft Manufacturers, Avionics Man ufacturers and Airlines. Highlighted in yellow are FMCs with the most limited NDB capacity. AIRCRAFT FMC TYPE/VERSION CAPACIT Y WORDS DATA FROM AIRCRAFT MANUFACTURERS B737-NG B737-NG B747-400 B747-8 B757/767 B757/767 B757/767 B757/767 B757/767 B757/767 B777 B777 B787 A320 A320 A320 A320 A320 A330 A330 A330 A340 A340 A340 A350 A380 E145 GE U10.6, U10.7, U10.8 GE U10.8 with new FMC hardware Honeywell 747-4 Honeywell NextGen Honeywell 200K FMC Honeywell 700K FMC Honeywell 1 Meg Non-PIP, PIP Honeywell 2 Meg Non-PIP, PIP Honeywell Pegasus Pre 2009 Honeywell Pegasus 2009 Honeywell AIMS 1 Honeywell AIMS 2 Honewyell Honeywell Pegasus P1 Honeywell Pegasus P1-A Thales FMS1 Thales FMS2 REV2+ Thales FMS2 R1-A Thales FMS2 REV2+ Thales FMS2 R1-A Honeywell Pegasus P3 Thales FMS2 REV2+ Thales FMS2 R1-A Honeywell Pegasus P3 TBD Honeywell Honeywell NZ2000 4 Mw 8 Mw 1 Mw 50 Mw 200 Kw 700 Kw 1 Mw 2 Mw 2 Mw 3.8 Mw 1 Mw* 6 Mw 15 Mw 2 Mw 10 Mw 200 Kw 2.5 Mw 3.5 Mw 2.5 Mw 3.5 Mw 2.7 Mw 2.5 Mw 3.5 Mw 2.75 Mb TBD 10 Mw 8 MB 16 MB 2 MB 100 MB 400 KB 1.4 MB 2 MB 4 MB 4 MB 7.5 MB 2 MB* 12 MB 30 MB 4 MB 20 MB 400 KB 5 MB 7 MB 5 MB 7 MB 5.5 MB 5 MB 7 MB 5.5 MB TBD 20 Mb 8 Mb CAPACIT Y BYTES

E170 E170 E190 E190

Honeywell Primus EPIC v17.X Honeywell Primus EPIC v19.3 (16 Mb Capable) Honeywell Primus EPIC v4.X Honeywell Primus EPIC v19.3 (16 Mb Capable) DATA FROM AVIONCIS MANUFACTURERS

8 MB 8.57 MB 8 MB 8.57 MB

MD80/A300 ATR-42/72 Mooney M20J Cirrus SR20 Ratheon King Air 200 Embraer Phenom 100 CRJ-100/200 CRJ-100/200 CRJ-700/900 B747-100 A300-600 E145 Q400 Ratheon King Air 350

HT9100 Garmin GPS 155 - Americas-N (3 Mb Capable) Garmin GNC 430/530 Legacy (8 Mb Capable) Garmin GNC 430W/530W (16 Mb Capable) Garmin G1000 (16 Mb Capable) Rockwell Collins FMC4200 Rockwell Collins FMC4200 with LPV & RF Update Rockwell Collins FMC4200 CMC CMA-900 CMC CMA-9000 Universal UNS-1C/D/K Universal UNS-1E/F/L Universal UNS-1Ew/1Fw/1Lw DATA FROM AIRLINES

8 Mw

16 MB 1.75 MB 7.53 MB 12.12 MB 12.12 MB

5 Mw 9.5 Mw 9.5 Mw

10 MB 19 MB 19 MB 8 MB 17 MB 8 MB 32 MB

32 Mw

64 MB

B757 B757/767 B757 B757 B757/767 B737-300 B737-400 MD80

Honeywell Pegasus 2001 Honeywell Pegasus 2005 Honeywell PIP 1M Honewyell Plug and Play Honeywell Legacy GE U5.0 GE U10.5 Honeywell HT9100

2.3 Mw 2.3 Mw 1 Mw 2.3 Mw 1 Mw 288 Kw 3.5 Mw 2 MB

MD88 MD90 A319/320 A330

Honeywell 926 Honeywell 926 Honeywell 964 Honeywell PIP Load 16

650 Kw 200 Kw 400 Kw 1 Mw

Table 3; Approximate number of NDB limited aircraft currently operating in the NAS. Data is current as of February 2, 2012 AIRCRAFT NUMBER OF AIRCRAFT 9 1 97 3 145 36 15 6 20 24 123 290 117 28 FMC TYPE CAPACIT Y WORDS GE U10.5 GE U5.0 Honeywell 747-4 Honeywell Legacy Honeywell Legacy Honeywell Legacy Honeywell Legacy Honeywell Legacy Honeywell Legacy Honeywell Legacy Honeywell AIMS1 Honeywell HT9100 Honeywell 926 Honeywell 926 1 Mw 1 Mw 650 Kw 200 Kw 3.5 Mw 288 Kw 1 Mw 200 Kw 700 Kw 200 Kw 700 Kw 200 Kw 700 Kw 1 MB 2MB 2MB 2 MB CAPACITY BYTES

737-300 737-400 747-400 757-200 757-200 767-200 767-200 767-300 767-300 767-300 777-200 MD80 MD88 MD90

In the case of Table 3, for perspective, on February 2, 2012, there were 6,918 U.S. Code of Federal Regulations (CFR) Part 121 air carrier aircraft operating in the NAS9 and 6,544 or 95% were equipped with FMCs.

Additional Capacity Issues


Some FMCs also have procedure capacity issues. Although one widely used FMC model has an 8 MB+ NDB capacity that may be expanded to 16 MB, it has issues at airports with over 100 arrival and departure procedures. Some airport examples where 100 arrival and departure procedures are exceeded include Cairo, Amsterdam, Madrid, Paris (Le Bourget, Orly and Charles de Gaulle), Mumbai, New Delhi and Beijing. A FMC service bulletin issued states that the aircraft may lose FMC applications in flight with over 100 procedures and flight plan uplinking.10 Further, another manufacturer has a FMC model with a limit of 99 total procedures and a limit of 8 waypoints per procedure. A third FMC manufacturer has a model with a limit on the amount of arrivals, departure and approaches as shown below: Early models limit of 70 departures, 70 arrivals, and 29 approaches at an airport. Later models limit of 130 departures, 130 arrivals, and 39 approaches at an airport.

from the binary packing of data into a general standard that works with all FMCs. Database development groups are proposing using a version of Extensible Markup Language (XML) which will take up significantly more storage. FMC vendors and airlines have expressed concern over this proposal because of memory storage requirements. This proposal is still in its infancy and has yet to be proposed as a formal standard.

Size or Capacity Management


With the advent of PBN procedures, the demand for increased NDB memory capacity will continue. Today, memory limitations require that some operators carefully customize their databases based on the individual needs of their operation. Airlines work around the capacity issues using size or capacity management techniques loading only the data that is needed in a particluar aircraft used on that aircrafts route structure either by sectors or geographic squares and rectangles. By restricting the loaded data in this manner, the capacity problem is solved and it is more economical for the airline as airlines pay for their database by bit (8 bits in a byte). However, it restricts the schedule flexibility of the airline since some of their aircraft are restricted to regions. Some examples: Virgin America has no need for southeast or southwest region procedures; Hawiian Airlines has no need for Alaska procedures (or mid west or east coast); Southwest Airlines has no need for Hawaii procedures; and Colgan Airlines only requires east coast procedures. In addition the large airlines with expansive route structures restrict certain aircraft types to geographic regions resulting in the decrease in scheduling flexibility mentioned above. Airlines also continue to work with their data suppliers to customize the individual NDBs for their fleets based on particularized airframe, route or operational requirements. Examples of NDB size management are: Remove airports with procedures that are no longer needed for line operations. Remove some unneeded procedures from airport records such as conventional SIDs, STARs, and approaches (non-directional beacon, VOR, localizer, etc.).

There is no additional proprietary information on the observations above, but they represent limitations unrelated to the total physical memory capacity that could require tailoring of a database. With every runway end at many large airports having an ILS, VOR, RNAV, RNP, and possibly a VOR and nondirectional beacon approach with various SBAS and GBAS approaches being introduced, the 29 and 39 approaches may soon be exceeded. Another FMC capacity issue is the number of waypoints available for processing. One widely used FMC with ample NDB capacity may store a maximum of 255 terminal waypoints for an individual airport. Some airports now exceed 300 waypoints. A related concern is a means to move away
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10

http://av-info.faa.gov/OpCert.asp Falcon Service News Flash [5]

Remove all procedures from some airports but retain the airport. This will give the crew a visual location of the airport on the FMC Navigation (map) Display (ND) which allows the crew to extend the runway centerline for situational awareness in case of an emergency. Waypoint optimization such as removing NRS grid points or electing not to install NRS grid points in the NDB. Remove all holding patterns except those on missed approaches.

database. Below are examples of procdedure size estimates from one airline. The KPHX RNAV (RNP) Z RWY 26 uses as many as 500 words in the database or 1,000 bytes in a 32 bit system. The airline states that the average approach in their navigation database uses 100 FMC words. The KPHX BARGN ONE RNAV DEPARTURE uses as many as 1,500 words in the database or 3,000 bytes in a 32 bit system. The airline states that the average SID in their navigation database uses 500 FMC words. The KPHX GEELA TWO RNAV ARRIVAL uses as many as 1,000 words in the database or 2,000 bytes in a 32 bit system. The airline states that the average STAR in their navigation database uses 500 FMC words.

Conclusions
The Flight Management Computer (FMC) and associated databases are an essential part of modern airline avionics. Commercial air carrier and corporate flight department decisions concerning the initial purchase or retrofit of FMC hardware, make any issue of NDB capacity extremely important. Airlines are closely balancing expected operational benefit and subsequent NDB capacity issues with purchase requirements for new aircraft against the total capital investment required to maintain or upgrade current airframes. Until the cost and inconvenience of the capacity management process and associated issues exceeds the cost to purchase new aircraft or upgrade avionics, many airlines are either unwilling, or unable to incur additional costs based on memory capacity alone. Upgrading may make sense when additional memory capacity is coupled with improved performance and PBN capability, such as the ability to process radius-to-fix leg types and RNP alerting and monitoring. Many FMCs cannot be updated due to parts obsolescence.11 Navigational data volume grows on an annual basis because of new procedure development and the short term need to carry along legacy procedure types. Approaches are a significant part of the growth. The advent of X, Y and Z approaches; RNP Authorization Required (AR) approaches; SBAS and GBAS approaches; etc. has caused growth. These new approaches are in addition to established approaches. New RNAV SIDS and STARS in addition to conventional SIDs and STARs add growth. Everytime a waypoint or a NRS grid point is added to the NAS, it takes up to 5 words in the
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The examples cited above do not take into consideration database compression used by the various FMC manufacturers. For perspective, there were 11,624 RNAV and RNP AR approaches in the NAS as of March 6, 2012. In addition, there were 18,290 other instrument procedures, and 2,754 SIDs and STARs. Database capacity is increasing in newer FMCs and/or hardware updates. At GE, the capacity of the FMC version U10.5 is 3.5 Mw while the U10.6 , U10.7 and U10.8a are 8 MB, and the U10.8a with a FMC hardware change is 16 MB. The new U11.0 coming in the Fall of 2012 will have larger memory. Thales FMS2 in the Airbus fleet has increased from 5 MB to 7 MB capacity. Honeywell has increased the B777 capacity from the AIMS1 BP2001 of 2 MB to the current AIMS2 BPv14 FMC with 12 MB. The B787 has 20 MB and the A380 has 30 MB. The Honeywell NextGen 100 MB FMC onboard the B7478 and Gulfstream 650 is the future of FMC capabilities. Navigation database capacity will continue to be an issue for NextGen through the near-term. The solution is that the airlines are slowly upgrading FMCs in their fleets. Through continued airline industry consolidation and new fleet purchases over the next decade, one can expect to see an increase in

Wallace et al. [6]

navigational database capacity for the mid-term. Based solely upon data suppliers projected annual increase of procedures produced, airlines will be required to increase FMC capacities to maintain a degree of competitive advantage and take advantage of PBN Implementation.

References
[1] Aeronautical Radio, Inc., December 19, 2008, ARINC Navigation Systems Data Base Specifications 424-19, Aeronautical Radio, Inc., Annapolis, MD. [2] Federal Aviation Administration, September 20, 2010, AC 20-153, Acceptance of Aeronautical Data Processes and Associated Databases, Department of Transportation, Washington, DC. [3] International Civil Aviation Organization, International Standards and Recommended Practices, July, 2003, Annex 15 to the Convention on International Civil Aviation, Aeronautical Information Services, International Civil Aviation Organization, Montreal, Quebec, Canada. [4] Federal Aviation Administration, 2001, FAAH-8083-15, Instrument Flying Handbook, Washington DC, Flight Standards Service , Department of Transportation, General Services. [5] Dassault Falcon Customer Service, April 1, 2010, Falcon Service News Flash, ATA-34, Navigation, Possible Loss of FMS Navigation System After Flight Plan Up-link via AFIS , Dassault Aviation, Saint-Cloud, Paris, France. [6] Wallace, K., et al., August, 2011, Analysis of Proposed Performance-Based Navigation Air Traffic Service Route Overlay Implementation Strategies, MTR110333, The MITRE Corporation, McLean, VA. [7] Smith, R., 2001, The Avionics Handbook, Flight Management Systems, CRC Press LLC, Boca Raton, Florida.

Discipline Engineer at The MITRE Corporations Center for Advanced Aviation System Development (CAASD) on the PBN Operations Team. He has worked on PBN implementation, aircraft avionics capability and flight management systems differences both domestically and internationally for over 10 years and is a retired Naval Aviator and a retired Trans World Airlines Captain.

Acknowledgements
Without the contributions and cooperation of the following individuals and companies the research into FMC NDB capacity could not have been completed: Kevin Allen, US Airways; Tom Williams, Delta Airlines (now at US Airways); Ellen McGaughy, Rockwell Collins; David Zeitouni, Universal Avionics (now at Boeing); Clay Barber, Garmin; Dr. Michael Gordon Smith, CMC Electronics; Erik Ringnes, Honeywell; and Brigitte Leconte-Dabin, Airbus. The author also appreciates the contributions of Michael Cramer (previously at Smiths Aerospace), Sam Miller (previously at Boeing) and Tass Hudak (previously at Delta Airlines) that are with The MITRE Corporations Center for Advanced Aviation System Development (CAASD). Finally, the author would like to thank Kristal Archer from The MITRE Corporation for editing and preparing this document for publication.

Disclaimer
The contents of this material reflect the views of the author. Neither the Federal Aviation Administration nor the Department of Transportation makes any warranty, guarantee, or promise, either expressed or implied, concerning the content or accuracy of the views expressed herein.

Email Address
Albert A. Herndon aherndon@mitre.org

Biography
Albert A. Herndon is a Principal Multi-

2012 Integrated Communications Navigation and Surveillance (ICNS) Conference April 24-26, 2012

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